Break the ice and get to know people better by selecting several of these get-to-know-you questions.
- Who is your hero?
- If you could live anywhere, where would it be?
- What is your biggest fear?
- What is your favorite family vacation?
- What would you change about yourself if you could?
- What really makes you angry?
How do you get questions?
Use these guidelines when developing questions:
- Plan your questions.
- Know your purpose.
- Open conversation.
- Speak your listener’s language.
- Use neutral wording.
- Follow general questions with specific ones.
- Focus your questions so they ask one thing at a time.
- Ask only essential questions.
How do you find a good question?
Here are some of the most essential characteristics of a good question.
- Relevant. A good question is relevant.
- Clear. A good question is framed in a clear, easily understandable language, without any vagueness.
- Concise.
- Purposeful.
- Guiding But Not Leading.
- Stimulates Thinking.
- Single-Dimensional.
What questions can I ask my soulmate?
Romantic questions: Thinking about your relationship
- What did you think when you first met me?
- What about our relationship makes you really happy?
- If you had one word to describe our relationship what would it be?
- What’s your biggest fear for this relationship?
- What’s one difference between us that you absolutely love?
Which is the best way to ask a question?
By using an open-ended question you get insights and additional information you might not have known existed. Questions with “would,” “should,” “is,” “are,” and “do you think” all lead to yes or no. Questions with “who,” “what,” “where,” “when,” “how,” or “why” lead to people giving some thought to their answers and provide much more information.
How can I find out what people are searching for?
To help you find what people are searching for around a particular topic, just type in your keyword or phrase and watch the magic happen. SEMrush will pull phrase match keywords, related keywords, and organic search results.
Why do people ask how are you doing right now?
“How are you doing right now?” That’s the question I’ve been defaulting to on the phone, over text, and over Zoom chats during this time of ballooning, Covid-19-fueled communications. It was a useful question at first—an assumption-free signal of care.
Do you know the answer to the last question?
(Although if you’re asking these q’s of your BIL… you should probably definitely know the answer to that last one.)